Mahler Symphony No. 4 - 4th Movement - Listening Guide

Published: March 18, 2021, 5 p.m.

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Very comfortably. Strophic. The fourth movement opens with a relaxed, bucolic scene in G major. A child, voiced by a soprano, presents a sunny, naive vision of Heaven and describes the feast being prepared for all the saints. The scene has its darker elements: the child makes it clear that the heavenly feast takes place at the expense of animals, including a sacrificed lamb. The child\\u2019s narrative is punctuated by faster passages recapitulating the first movement.

Unlike the final movement of traditional symphonies, the fourth movement of Mahler\\u2019s No. 4 is essentially a song, containing verses, with interludes, a prelude, and a postlude (a strophic structure). By the time the postlude is heard, there is a modulation to E major (the tonic major of the relative minor) and unusually stays in this key, ending the symphony away from the tonic of G major. Several ties to the Third Symphony can be heard in these passages as well.

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A listening guide of Symphony No. 4 - 4th Movement with Lew Smoley.

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